The Sun (San Bernardino)

Monthly housing payments up 37%, biggest jump ever

- Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com.

A mix of high home prices and soaring mortgage rates proved an expensive mix for Southern California homebuyers in April.

Buyers who financed a medianpric­ed home at $760,000 got a $3,010 monthly house payment, up 37% in 12 months — the largest jump ever.

If you think that's high, payments in Orange County topped $4,000 and the region's “bargain” San Bernardino County just crossed $2,000.

Other record-smashing, one-year surges in estimated mortgage payments were found in

Riverside and San Diego counties.

My trusty spreadshee­t looked at the messy intersecti­on of skyrocketi­ng home prices (the monthly median from DQNews) and climbing mortgage rates (the average 30-year deals from Freddie Mac) dating to 1988. Using that data, we generated a hypothetic­al but typical monthly house payment a buyer would get, assuming a 20% down payment. The total did not account for property taxes, associatio­n dues or insurance.

Mortgage costs are soaring as the Federal Reserve tries to cool an overheated economy that’s pushing up inflation and overpricin­g assets. In April, the three-month average mortgage rate jumped to 4.3% versus 3.8% the previous month and 3% a year earlier.

What’s that mean to a borrower’s buying power? In just one month, lenders would give out 6% less money for the same loan payment. Over the past year, it’s a 15% decrease — a cut larger than 99% of all 12-month periods since 1988.

The pain

From March to April alone, the estimated monthly payment jumped $272 or 10%. In a year, the payment is up $819 — a stunning hike surpassing a 2013 increase.

Note the median price, by itself, is up only 17% over 12 months.

Do not forget that this math assumes a 20% down payment of $152,000. That’s not an easy nest egg to build. This additional financial burden has grown by $10,800 in the past year.

So it is any wonder that April’s six-county sales count was off 19% from a year ago?

The sales slump also is a historical­ly noteworthy chill. Since 1988, there have been just 44 months with steeper purchasing declines. Or you can say it has been worse only 11% of the time.

Locally speaking

Let’s look at the same math found within the counties:

• Los Angeles: The record-high $3,426 payment comes as the county’s median sales price hit $865,000. In a month, the payment jumped $297 or 9.5%. In a year, it’s up $901 or 36%. The median price is up 15% over 12 months. And 20% down means finding $173,000 — up $22,950 in a year.

• Orange: Record-high $4,159 payment for a record $1.05 million median. In the month, it’s up $359 or 9.5%. In a year, the payment’s up $1,227 or a record-setting 42%. The median price is up 21% over 12 months. And

20% down is $210,000 — up $35,800 in a year.

• Riverside: Record-high $2,337 payment on the peak $590,000 median. In the month, $176 or 8.2% higher. Year’s rise: $688 or a record-setting 42%. Median: Up 20% over 12 months. And 20% down is $118,000 — up $20,000 in a year.

• San Bernardino: Record-high $2,056 payment on the peak $519,000 median. In the month, $212 or 11.5% higher. Year’s rise: $598 or 41%. Median: Up 20% over 12 months. And 20% down is $103,800 — up $17,200 in a year.

• San Diego: Record-high $3,328 payment on the peak $840,250 median. In the month, $330 or 11% higher. Year’s rise: $972 or a record-setting 41%. Median: Up 20% over 12 months. And 20% down is $168,050 — up $28,050 in a year.

• Ventura: Record-high $3,228 payment on the peak $815,000 median. In the month, $341 or 11.8% higher. Year’s rise: $850 or

36%. Median: Up 15% over 12 months. And 20% down is $163,000 — up $21,700 in a year.

Bottom line

Some industry cheerleade­rs attempt to minimize the current market’s financial challenges by adjusting their math to include inflation’s impact.

Fine. After subtractin­g the rising cost of living back to 1988, April’s house payment in Southern California wasn’t a record. Still, it was higher than 92% of all months.

And this kind of historical context — minus inflation — by county? Los Angeles tops 94% of all months, Orange (94%), San Bernardino (92%), San Diego (91%), Riverside (89%), and Ventura (82%).

No matter how you slice the data, local homebuying is unnervingl­y pricey.

SAN FRANCISCO >> An abortion opponent was arraigned Thursday on charges of felony stalking and other misdemeano­rs after he targeted a physician at home and barged into the San Francisco health clinic where the physician works, frightenin­g the doctor, patients and staff, District Attorney Chesa Boudin said.

Aaron Jonathan Hurley, 37, pleaded not guilty to charges that also included misdemeano­r obstructin­g freedom of access to a clinic and vandalism. The Los Angeles resident is affiliated with the group Progressiv­e Anti-Abortion Uprising, Boudin said in a press release.

“Reproducti­ve rights are under attack across the country — and here in San Francisco,” Boudin said. “Make no mistake: anyone who harasses, threatens, or interferes in any way with the constituti­onally protected work of doctors and staff — who heroically provide care — will be held accountabl­e.”

Allison Aranda, senior staff counsel with Life Legal Defense Foundation in Napa and Hurley’s attorney, did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment.

Boudin’s office said that Hurley and three others on

March 14 used a decoy to get into the Women’s Options Center at the Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. When the nurse went to speak to a woman pretending to need counseling, the group barged into the clinic, began filming and chanting the doctor’s name along with: “We know who you are, we know what you do,” according to the press release.

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